Nope, just stated it wrong. I need to slow down the rebound.You are kidding right?
Any recommendations. I've been told that before, maybe by yourself, but I've never been able to find such a thing. Parts guys just give me a blank stare.... then you need a rebuildable shock that you can add more rebound to.
duhYou are grossly overloading your truck to be in that situation :-laf
Thanks... :-laf
It's called asking for assistance with finding a product and all I get is a picture of something without any name on it or a place to find out more about them. Real helpful.
It's called asking for assistance with finding a product and all I get is a picture of something without any name on it or a place to find out more about them. Real helpful.
The pic of the bypass shock above may have been taken off my other site, Swayaways.com. There's a whole bunch of cool stuff to drool over on here.
We have a work around in the mix. We'll get the travel out of the Firestones with our new fangdangled air bag reservoir kit that's in the works.
The compression side of the Firestones is were the problem lies. When they ramp up, the stored air/energy doesn't have a place to go. bajabob was using 3-4'' of travel with the standard air bags and my 2. 25 System. I think we can more than double that with a couple of reservoirs in line.
If I can make it economicly feasable, we'll get it done.
Is there another option for springs to carry 8K of tongue weight?You want to rethink your spring set up or get a Dodge Ram 5500.
If you need all of that spring to satisfy the weight your carrying your truck is more than overloaded, it's dangerous.
I'll check it out. I'm getting sick of spending money on this thing for now. If the price is right, I'll be in the market after I'm thru satisfying Uncle Sam.You can order the 2. 25 Sway A Way off of LORENZindustries.com
A Firestone airbag on a rear of a dodge full drooped with all the air lines disconnected looks like a porn star face down with a 30lbs. weight hanging off her boob. I mean it's really stretched. So please enlighten us..... Oo.
I asked of Bob:Did you ask for info or a "matching space suit?"
You gave me a pic of a shock that might be just what I need but you gave me no way of knowing who makes it or where to get it or where to get some more info on it. The pic looks like a ray gun stood on the muzzle so where's the harm in a little joke. Lighten up. If it makes ya feel better, thanks for being the first one to try and help.Any recommendations. I've been told that before, maybe by yourself, but I've never been able to find such a thing. Parts guys just give me a blank stare.
The compression/bump side of the travel is the issue, not droop. Here's a couple of examples.
bajabobs truck, wasn't using all of the up travel untill he used Carli's bags. Frankly he wasn't getting more than 3-4'' if uptravel no matter how hard he pounded the truck with a camper in the bed while running the standard 3rd gen Firstone bags above the axle. Carlis bags increased up travel an gave him a swingin' ride with my 2. 25 System.
The caviate to bajabob's System was the rebound. I added a lot to it when I first delivered the 2. 25 Sway-a-Way System to him. He wanted even more control, and less sway, so I changed the valving again, and added even more rebound valving the second go around. The rear of his truck can't droop out during normal driving, and he loves it. His load is under complete control with very little sway. Simply put Carlis bags allowed for more up travel, while my shocks were valved to the moon and wouldn't allow for a lot of droop. 10'' of droop is a mute point for the average guy who uses his truck as a daily driver and for towing.
I played around with 2nd gen bag in different mounting locations, with and without hard mounting them to the axle, and found the axle didn't droop out untill I was skipping across whoops or abusing the truck at speed. You can hear, and feel them clank when they engage the leaf pack.
Now, when I changed things up and ran the larger/longer 3rd gen bags it allowed for more droop, 8'' or so, while they were hard mounted to te axle, but they limit the up travel because the stored energy in the form of compressed air, has no were to go. Give the air a place to go when compressed, and you'll get the same ride as Carlis bags minus 2-3'' of droop.
If I can do this for a couple hundred dollars in material, the average joe will have a long travel air bag for half the price all said and done. It will have 8'' of usable travel, not 10-11''
I'd put a green back on it and say they'd even ride better than your bags because there will be more room for expansion on the compression stroke. The rising rate can be tuned out, and the added spring rate won't come on as hard. Though, your design will take the cake when the truck is 4 feet in the air. (I'll gladly continue to send those customers your way. )